Clarify -push/-pop vs -font

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John Whitington 2023-07-19 15:27:01 +01:00
parent 3c8083ecb6
commit b11da09944
2 changed files with 4 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -4407,6 +4407,8 @@ PDF maintains a stack of graphics state, which we can manipulate with \texttt{-p
\noindent This is important because, in the absence of \texttt{-push} and \texttt{-pop} there would be no way to reverse the effect of a graphics matrix modification except to manually calculate its inverse and apply it. \noindent This is important because, in the absence of \texttt{-push} and \texttt{-pop} there would be no way to reverse the effect of a graphics matrix modification except to manually calculate its inverse and apply it.
NB: When writing text (see below) the \texttt{-font} option is not subject to \texttt{-push} and \texttt{-pop}. Text is set the the font most recently chosen on the command line.
\section{Re-use with XObjects} \section{Re-use with XObjects}
{\small\begin{framed} {\small\begin{framed}
\vspace{1.5mm} \vspace{1.5mm}
@ -4599,6 +4601,8 @@ We can change the text rendering mode to show outline text or, in this example,
\end{tabular} \end{tabular}
\bigskip \bigskip
NB: When writing text the \texttt{-font} option is not subject to \texttt{-push} and \texttt{-pop}. Text is set the the font most recently chosen on the command line.
\section{The next page} \section{The next page}
{\small\begin{framed} {\small\begin{framed}